Thursday, June 26, 2014 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Ye Luo – School of Mathematics, Georgia Tech
The work in this dissertation is mainly focused on three subjects which are
essentially related to linear systems on metric graphs and its application: (1)
rank-determining sets of metric graphs, which can be employed to actually compute
the rank function of arbitrary divisors on an arbitrary metric graph, (2) a
tropical convexity theory for linear systems on metric graphs, and (3) smoothing of
limit linear series of rank one on refined metrized complex (an intermediate object
between metric graphs and algebraic curves),
Tuesday, June 24, 2014 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Xiaolin Wang – School of Mathematics, Georgia Tech
In this work, we numerically studied the effect of the vorticity on the
enhancement of heat transfer in a channel flow. Based on the model we
proposed, we find that the flow exhibits different properties depending on
the value of four dimensionless parameters. In particularly, we can
classify the flows into two types, active and passive vibration, based on
the sign of the incoming vortices. The temperature profiles according to
the flow just described also show different characteristics corresponding
to the active and passive vibration cases. In active vibration cases, we
find that the heat transfer performance is directly related to the strength
of the incoming vortices and the speed of the background flow. In passive
vibration cases, the corresponding heat transfer process is complicated and
varies dramatically as the flow changes its properties. Compared to the
fluid parameters, we also find that the thermal parameters have much less
effect on the heat transfer enhancement. Finally, we propose a more
realistic optimization problem which is to minimize the maximum temperature
of the solids with a given input energy. We find that the best heat
transfer performance is obtained in the active vibration case with zero
background flow.
The famous Doignon-Bell-Scarf theorem is a Helly-type result about the existence of integer solutions on systems linear inequalities. The purpose
of this paper is to present the following ``weighted'' generalization: Given an integer k, we prove that there exists a constant c(k,n),
depending only on the dimension n and k, such that if a polyhedron {x : Ax <= b} contains exactly k integer solutions, then there exists a subset
of the rows of cardinality no more than c(k,n), defining a polyhedron that contains exactly the same k integer solutions. We work on both
upper and lower bounds for this constant.
This is joint work with Quentin Louveaux, Iskander Aliev and Robert Bassett.
Tuesday, June 24, 2014 - 12:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006.
Speaker
Amey Kaloti – Georgia Tech.
We start studying open book foliations in this series of seminars. We will go through the theory and see how it is used in applications to contact topology.
Monday, June 16, 2014 - 14:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Atreyee Bhattacharya – Indian Institute Of Science
In this talk we will discuss an ODE associated to the evolution of curvature along the Ricci flow. We talk about the stability of certain fixed points of this ODE (up to a suitable normalization). These fixed points include curvature of a large class of symmetric spaces.
Thursday, June 12, 2014 - 10:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 269
Speaker
Chun-Hung Liu – Georgia Tech
Robertson and Seymour proved that graphs are well-quasi-ordered by the
minor relation and the weak immersion relation. In other words, given
infinitely many graphs, one graph contains another as a minor (or a
weak immersion, respectively). An application of these theorems is
that every property that is closed under deleting vertices, edges, and
contracting (or "splitting off", respectively) edges can be
characterized by finitely many graphs, and hence can be decided in
polynomial time.
In this thesis we are concerned with the topological minor relation.
We say that a graph G contains another graph H as a topological
minor if H can be obtained from a subgraph of G by repeatedly
deleting a vertex of degree two and adding an edge incident with the
neighbors of the deleted vertex. Unlike the relation of minor and weak immersion,
the topological minor relation does not well-quasi-order graphs in general.
However, Robertson conjectured in the late 1980's that for every positive integer
k, the topological minor relation well-quasi-orders graphs that do not contain a
topological minor isomorphic to the path of length k with each edge duplicated.
This thesis consists of two main results. The first one is a structure theorem for
excluding a fixed graph as a topological minor, which is analogous to a cornerstone
result of Robertson and Seymour, who gave such structure for graphs that exclude a
fixed minor. Results for topological minors were previously obtained by Grohe and
Marx and by Dvorak, but we push one of the bounds in their theorems to the
optimal value. This improvement is needed for the next theorem.
The second main result is a proof of Robertson's conjecture. As a
corollary, properties on certain graphs closed under deleting
vertices, edges, and "suppressing" vertices of degree two can be
characterized by finitely many graphs, and hence can be decided in
polynomial time.
Given some class of "geometric spaces", we can make a ring as follows. (i) (additive structure) When U is an open subset of such a space X, [X] = [U] + [(X \ U)] (ii) (multiplicative structure) [X x Y] = [X] [Y].In the algebraic setting, this ring (the "Grothendieck ring of varieties") contains surprising structure, connecting geometry to arithmetic and topology. I will discuss some remarkable statements about this ring (both known and conjectural), and present new statements (again, both known and conjectural). A motivating example will be polynomials in one variable. (This talk is intended for a broad audience.) This is joint work with Melanie Matchett Wood.
Monday, June 2, 2014 - 14:05 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 005
Speaker
Alexander Aptekarev – Keldysh Institute, Russia
We discuss asymptotics of multiple orthogonal
polynomials with respect to Nikishin systems generated by two
measures (\sigma_1, \sigma_2) with unbounded supports
(supp(\sigma_1) \subset \mathbb{R}_+,
supp(\sigma_2) \subset \mathbb{R}_-); moreover, the second
measure \sigma_2 is discrete. We focus on deriving the strong and weak
asymptotic for a special system of multiple OP from this class with respect
to two Pollaczek type
weights on \mathbb{R}_+. The weak asymptotic for these
polynomials can be obtained by means of solution of an equilibrium problem.
For
the strong asymptotic we use the matrix Riemann-Hilbert approach.
Monday, May 12, 2014 - 11:00 for 1 hour (actually 50 minutes)
Location
Skiles 006
Speaker
Jordi-Lluis Figueras Romero – Department of Mathematics, Uppsala University
We provide several explicit examples of 3D quasiperiodic linear skew-products with simple Lyapunov spectrum, that is with 3 different Lyapunov multipliers, for which the corresponding Oseledets bundles are measurable but not continuous, colliding in a measure zero dense set.